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Home/ Questions/Q 7582857
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T18:32:22+00:00 2026-05-30T18:32:22+00:00

What I’m looking to do is make an HTTP post to a server URL

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What I’m looking to do is make an HTTP post to a server URL (ASP.NET MVC url) and send an XML file with the request.
I’m worried (maybe shouldn’t be?) that if I simply stick the XML string into the request stream it may be too long?

I’m almost positive there was a way to actually add a file itself to the HttpWebRequest, then extract that file on the server side.

This is a Silverlight assembly making a call to an ASP.NET MVC url.
So I’d also need to know how to extract the file on the MVC side from the request.

Thx

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T18:32:23+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 6:32 pm

    I’m worried (maybe shouldn’t be?) that if I simply stick the XML
    string into the request stream it may be too long?

    For this reason you should use a POST verb instead of GET.

    On the client side you could use a WebRequest and write the XML payload directly to the request stream:

    var request = WebRequest.CreateHttp("http://localhost:1398/home/upload");
    request.Method = "POST";
    request.BeginGetRequestStream(ar =>
    {
        var r = (HttpWebRequest)ar.AsyncState;
        // create some XML document to send to the server
        var doc = XDocument.Parse("<root>Value</root>");
        using (var stream = r.EndGetRequestStream(ar))
        {
            doc.Save(stream);
        }
        r.BeginGetResponse(asyncState =>
        {
            var req = (HttpWebRequest)asyncState.AsyncState;
            using (var response = req.EndGetResponse(asyncState))
            using (var responseStream = response.GetResponseStream())
            using (var reader = new StreamReader(responseStream))
            {
                var result = reader.ReadToEnd();
    
                // TODO: do something with the server response
                Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(() =>
                {
                    textBlock.Text = result;
                });
            }
        }, r);
    }, request);
    

    and on the server side you could have a controller:

    public class HomeController : Controller
    {
        [HttpPost]
        public ActionResult Upload(XDocument xdoc)
        {
            ...
        }
    }
    

    and a custom model binder for the XDocument type:

    public class XDocumentModelBinder : IModelBinder
    {
        public object BindModel(ControllerContext controllerContext, ModelBindingContext bindingContext)
        {
            return XDocument.Load(controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.InputStream);
        }
    }
    

    which will be registered in Application_Start:

    ModelBinders.Binders.Add(typeof(XDocument), new XDocumentModelBinder());
    
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